Tu te reconnaîtras

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"Tu te reconnaîtras" (Script error: No such module "IPA".; "You'll Recognise Yourself"), is a song recorded by French singer Anne-Marie David, with music composed by Template:Ill and lyrics written by Template:Ill. It Template:Esccnty in the Eurovision Song Contest 1973 held in Luxembourg, winning the contest.

Background

Conception

"Tu te reconnaîtras" was composed by Template:Ill with lyrics by Template:Ill. Anne-Marie David recorded the song in five languages: French, English as "Wonderful Dream", German as "Du bist da", Spanish as "Te reconocerás", and in two entirely different Italian versions entitled "Il letto del re" and "Non si vive di paura" respectively.[1]

Eurovision

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On 7 April 1973, the Eurovision Song Contest was held at Grand Théâtre in Luxembourg hosted by CLT and broadcast live throughout the continent. Anne-Marie David performed "Tu te reconnaîtras" eleventh on the evening, following Template:Esccnty's "Chi sarà con te" by Massimo Ranieri and preceding Template:Esccnty's "You're Summer" by The Nova. Pierre Cao conducted the event's live orchestra in the performance of the Luxembourgian entry.[3]

At the close of voting, the song had received 129 points, winning the contest in a field of seventeen, and beating the second-placed Template:Esccnty's entry by 4 points and the Template:Esccnty's by another 2 points.[4] Spain's "Eres tú" performed by Mocedades and UK's "Power to All Our Friends" by Cliff Richard, would go on to become major hit singles in 1973 –in the case of "Eres tú" worldwide– and are today both widely considered Eurovision classics.

"Tu te reconnaîtras" is the only winning entry of Luxembourg with some level of local involvement. Although both Anne-Marie David, the composer Claude Morgan, and the lyricist Vline Buggy, were all French, the conductor Pierre Cao was Luxembourgish. It was also the first time a country won the contest two years in succession without sharing the victory, as Template:Esccnty in Template:Escyr. It was succeeded as Luxembourg's entry in the Template:Escyr by "Bye Bye, I Love You", performed by Ireen Sheer.

Aftermath

Anne Marie David is one of the few Eurovision winners to return to the contest; in Template:Escyr she represented her native Template:Esccnty singing the song "Je suis l'enfant soleil" in Jerusalem and finished in third place after Template:Esccnty's "Hallelujah" and Template:Esccnty's "Su canción". David performed "Tu te reconnaîtras" in the Eurovision twenty-fifth anniversary show Songs of Europe held on 22 August 1981 in Mysen.[5] In the Eurovision fiftieth anniversary competition Congratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest, held on 22 October 2005 in Copenhagen, she performed the song as part of the interval acts.[6] She performed the song in the Eurovision sixtieth anniversary show Eurovision Song Contest's Greatest Hits held on 31 March 2015 in London.[7][8]

Chart history

Weekly charts

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Chart (1973) Peak
position

Legacy

In 1973 Turkish pop singer Nilüfer Yumlu brought out a Turkish-language version of the song, entitled "Göreceksin kendini". The song had great success in Turkey. The same year, Finnish singer Katri Helena published a Finnish-language version of the song, "Nuoruus on seikkailu" ("Being Young is an Adventure"). In 1973 singer Věra Špinarová published a Czech-language version of the song, "Zpívej jak já" ("Sing like me") In 1974 singer Irena Jarocka published a Polish-language version of the song, "Ty i ja – wczoraj i dziś" ("You and I – Yesterday and Today").

References

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External links

Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/checkTemplate:Succession box/check Eurovision Song Contest winners
1973 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by

Template:Eurovision Song Contest 1973 Template:Luxembourg in the Eurovision Song Contest Template:List of Eurovision Song Contest winners Template:Songs of Europe (Eurovision) Template:Eurovision Song Contest's Greatest Hits Template:Authority control